A creative wunderkind who once topped the country’s most prestigious fashion school, Apple March is now languishing behind a retail counter. When fate shifts and her imaginative passion is reawakened, so too is the threat of a past secret.From the cool heart of Melbourne to Paris and New York, in a vibrant world of Pimms and croquet, crocodile boots and cocoon coats, Apple seeks the thrill of creative freedom and the one man worth sharing it with.A page-turning debut novel written with fun, stylish wit, March is too satisfying to miss.

Review:

This novel was received for free from the author/publisher and this is our honest review.

We liked this. Most of the characters had distinctive traits and we thought the descriptions of everything fashion and designer were done well. However. That’s about all we have for positives. There were a fair few typos and some larger ones where the sentence had to be reread a few times to understand. The main character Apple had little direction and although this did give her character some room to grow it made for a very lagging beginning. Plus Charlie and his whole family were in desperate need of some flaws. Everything about them was too perfect. Too picturesque. And did Apple come from money or not? It wasn’t really clear and if she was more middle class why on earth wasn’t there more reaction to the obscene amount of opulence experienced by Charlie and his family? Going to a croquet tournament and having a private area with rugs and your own personal waiter serving champagne? Yeah Apple took all the richness too much in stride for me. And the plot was just so-so. Not a lot of unexpected or unpredictable. We wanted more from it. This book hovered dangerously between 3 stars and 2.5 stars, but it was a cute (albeit very transparent) ending, so we put it into the 3 star bracket.

This review would’ve been 3.5 stars but we had to take .5 star off for language. There were 40+ f bombs. That is way too much swearing. And that’s just the f words. We didn’t even count other swears. We specifically state in the review policy that we don’t like excessive language. Maybe it’s different in Australia where much of the book takes place, but anything more than 5 f words and we just do not like it. We’d prefer there to be none at all. This was just time after time. From an authors stand point as well this was too much repetition. Even if it’s common in Australia for f bombs to be dropped that often (which we honestly don’t know) the characters began to sound all the same. And it begs the question whether or not these characters have any depth to them as they’re using the same words and expressions.

So it’s a light read with okay characters. But only pick it up if you can handle a lot of language.

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